CURRENT LITERATURE 



605 



Gulf Coast lumberman, March 1, 1915. — 

 Forestry problems of Texas, p. 34. 



Handle trade, Jan. 1915. — Canes — umbrellas — 

 whips; variety of woods used in industry; 

 list of manufactures, p. 7-10; What the 

 toy field offers; European war shifting 

 the center of manufacturing in America, 

 p. 15-16; Good field for wood turners; 

 candle sticks and lamp stands made of 

 wood and tastefully turned, p. 17; Con- 

 tributing to sports ; all kinds of wood used 

 in the industry; list of manufacturers, p. 

 22-6; Making pencils is big industry in 

 America, p. 27-8. 



Hardwood record, Feb. 25, 1915. — Sawdust 

 unsuitable for bread, p. 16-17; The sale of 

 wood ashes, p. 18-19. 



Hardwood record, March 10, 1915. — Mesquite 

 in semi-arid regions, p. 13; The prospect 

 for walnut supply, p. 15; Possibilities of 

 hardwood distillation, p. 17. 



Lumber world review, Feb. 10, 1915. — National 

 lumber manifacturers' association Decem- 

 ber report of production and movement of 

 lumber, p. 32. 



Lumber world review, Feb. 25, 1915. — The 

 wood block pavement of London town, 

 by Jack Brooks, p. 30-1. 



Lumber world review, March 10, 1915. — The 

 effect of the war upon the lumber trade, 

 by Warren F. Hickemell, p. 25-6. 



Packages, March, 1915. — World's box shook 

 industry, p. 16-19. 



Paper, Feb. 17, 1915. — Forest conservation in 

 New York state, by Jacob Gould Schur- 

 man, p. 15-16; Pulp and paper periodicals 

 of the world, p. 25. 



Paper, Feb. 24, 1915. — Four thousand years of 

 papermaking, by J. Newell Stephenson, 

 p. 34-8; Spruces and firs available for 

 paper pulp, by Nelson C. Brown, p. 46-52; 

 America's pulp and paper school; a new 

 branch of education successfully given at 

 the University of Maine, by J. Newell 

 Stephenson, p. 52-60, 64; Progress in 

 paper-making chemistry, by Ralph H. 

 McKee, p. 62-4; Woodpulp from yellow 

 pine waste, p. 176; Forestry legislation in 

 Maine, p. 182. 



Paper, March 10, 1915. — Hemlock as a pulp 

 wood, p. 19. 



Paper trade journal, Feb. 18, 1915. — The pulp 

 and paper industry in Newfoundland, by 

 P. T. McGrath, p. 63-6, 75-85; Forest 

 products laboratories of Canada, by John 

 S. Bates, p. 193-5; The hazards of paper 

 and pulp making, by Edward T. Walsh, 

 p. 197-205. 



Paper trade journal, March 4, 1915. — Bamboo 

 pulp, p. 48-50. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Feb. 15, 1915. — 

 Electricity in the lumber industry, bv 

 E. F. Whitney, p. 11-15, 23-4. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1, 1915. — 

 Conservation commission discusses for- 

 estry problems; address of Sir Clifford 

 Sifton, p. 72-7; The fire situation during 

 1914, p. 77-80; Forestry situation in 

 Quebec, by G. C. Piche, p. 80-2; The 

 essential features of a successful fire 



protective organization, by H. R. Mac- 

 Millan, p. 82-4; Cooperation in manage- 

 ment of Dominion timber lands and 

 cooperation with Ontario on the Trent 

 watershed survey, by B. E. Femow, p. 

 84-6. 



Railway review, Feb. 20, 1915. — Mixing tar 

 with creosote, by P. C. Reilly, p. 242-7. 



St. Louis lumberman, Feb. 15, 1915. — Timber 

 utilization, by O. T. Swan, p. 58-60. 



St. Louis lumberman, March 1, 1915. — Dry 

 rot in factory timbers, p. 46-7; Forest 

 products federation meeting in Chicago, 

 Feb. 24th and 25th, p. 59-63. 



Timberman, Feb. 1915. — New system for 

 drying larch, by D. T. Mason, p. 43-5; 

 Cable tramways in the Philippine Islands, 

 p. 45; Logging in Alaska, p. 48 L; Con- 

 structing a high pile bridge, by C. R. 

 Pope, p. 49-50. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 24, 

 1915. — Arbor day obligatory in Spain, 

 by Carl Bailey Hurst, p. 761. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 26, 

 1915. — New Chinese school of forestry, 

 by Thomas Sammons, p. 791. 



Veneers, March, 1915. — Methods for finishing 

 walnut, by Rudolph Kilboume, p. 15-16; 

 The utilization of waste veneer, p. 17-18. 



West Coast lumberman, March 1, 1915. — 

 United States Forest products laboratory 

 on how to dry cedar, by Harry D. Tiemann, 

 p. 35. 



Wood-worker, Feb. 1915. — New uses for saw- 

 dust, p. 33; Some hints for sawyers, by 

 C. R. Lake, p. 42. 



Forest journals 



Forest leaves, Feb. 1915. — What can be done 

 for forestry, by S. B. Elliott, p. 2-4; 

 Forest conservation in Switzerland, by 

 Marie Widmer, p. 9. 



Naturwissenschaftliche zeitschrift fur forst- 

 und landwirtschaft, Nov.-Dec, 1914. — 

 Die bohrmuschel (Genus Teredo Linne), 

 by F. Moll, p. 505-64. 



North woods, Feb. 1915. — The grain car door 

 industry, p. 17-21. 



Proceedings of the Society of American for- 

 esters, Jan. 1915. — The invasion of a 

 planted prairie grove, by Raymond J. 

 Pool, p. 1-8; Notes on the relation of 

 planting methods to survival, by E. E. 

 Carter, p. 9-17; A formula for normal 

 growing stock in selection system forests, 

 by Thornton T. Munger, p. 18-21; Land 

 classification rules for an Arizona forest, 

 by John D. Guthrie, p. 22-31; The con- 

 struction of a set of taper curves, by W. B. 

 Barrows, p. 32-40; Sand-dune reclamation 

 on the coast of northern California and 

 southern Oregon, by Frank B. Kellogg, 

 p. 41-64; Reading and replotting curves 

 by the strip method, by W. B. Barrows, 

 p. 65-7; Monterey pine, by Louis T. 

 Larsen, p. 68-74. 



Revue des eaux et forets, Jan. 1, 1915.; — Les 

 deboisements strategiques et le droit des 

 proprietaires, by G. Geneau, p. 521-7. 



